Revisiting Lewis

Sometimes childhood memories ought to be refreshed…

The post I made earlier wherein I did a riff on C.S. Lewis’ “Men Without Chests” (which means both more and less than the meme Hanson cited), spurred me to take my lunch time and reread the essay.

*whew!* Lewis really lays the barbarism of our age bare! This brief clip illustrates but one (perhaps close on to central) problem with so-called “public education” in these ever more and more homogenized States:

“St Augustine defines virtue as ordo amoris, the ordinate condition of the affections in which every object is accorded that kind of degree of love which is appropriate to it. Aristotle says that the aim of education is to make the pupil like and dislike what he ought. When the age for reflective thought comes, the pupil who has been thus trained in ‘ordinate affections’ or ‘just sentiments’ will easily find the first principles in Ethics; but to the corrupt man they will never be visible at all and he can make no progress in that science. Plato before him had said the same. The little human animal will not at first have the right responses. It must be trained to feel pleasure, liking, disgust, and hatred at those things which really are pleasant, likeable, disgusting and hateful In the Republic, the well-nurtured youth is one ‘who would see most clearly whatever was amiss in ill-made works of man or ill-grown works of nature, and with a just distaste would blame and hate the ugly even from his earliest years and would give delighted praise to beauty, receiving it into his soul and being nourished by it, so that he becomes a man of gentle heart.”

Indeed. The cultural and moral and ethical wasteland that is our popular culture owes much of itself to the destruction of a sense (and appreciation) of beauty and finding pleasure in good things that “prison for kids” (AKA “public schools”) seems bent on doing at every turn. It seems as though those who design, fund and run our “prisons for kids” do indeed intend that the end product be the “trousered ape[s]” and “urban blockhead[s]” Lewis decries. It must be so, because despite more and more money, despite ever louder railing against the methods and procedures that continually turn out more and more of this debased product, the so-called education establishment is determined to continue to do more of the same.

For more money, of course.

Thus is one foundation stone laid in the war to destroy Western Civilization: coarsen the youth, bend them to depravity so that they cannot even see things of real value as having value. Enslave them to the accretion of stuff as the only “true” value?regardless of that stuff’s worth: junk CDs filled with non-music; clothing that is “old” and “worthless” as soon as some trousered ape on MTV wears something less attractive and more worthless, but “new”; bigger house (to put more stuff in?); better car (more “bling”?another worthless criterion), etc. The new materialism: valued junk.

And where is Beauty, Honor, Justice, Love (no, not those animal slaverings pop culture misrepresents as “love”)?

Ahhh! That’s all relative…

I found The Abolition of Man, which includes “Men Without Chests”* essay and others, online here. I strongly recommend reading (or re-reading) it. Much of his writing therein is eerily prophetic.

(BTW, “Men Without Chests” includes as essential the idea: men without hearts… For a heart that has only the shallow draft of modern dulled sensibilities is no heart at all and provides nothing for the chest to hold or protect… What use a chest in that case, anyway, eh?)

“Men Without Chests”

Or perhaps not

(Wherein your humble—ha!—author emulates J.E.P. “It’s a daybook.” It’s not well organized or well-edited. It’s just stuff that occurs to me to jot down. Notes, to myself as much as anything else.)

One of the best reads of my teenage years was C.S. Lewis’ Abolition of Man. I was lucky it was included in an addendum to The Great Books, or I might not have read it, even though I was already familiar with some of Lewis’ other books (The Narnia Chronicles and the space trilogy).

At any rate, recently as I was reading an interview Arthur Chrenkoff did with Victor Davis Hanson, I was reminded of the first essay in the Lewis book (Hanson made eliptical reference to the meme birthed by Lewis’ “Men Without Chests”). Of course, my mind, being what it is, came up with a vision entirely at odds with the meme, though strangely complementary to Lewis’ thesis…

“Men without chests”—sure, that describes well the majority of men in our society who lack manly virtue (while embracing every manly and/or every effeminate vice), but is also brought to mind women who attempt to be the “men with chests” they seek to supplant or need to supply.

Two different things, those, but both equally destructive. On the one hand we find femi-nazis who thump their ill-constructed-for-thumping chests in ape of manly agression and on the other women who—very necessarily—take up the slack for the wusses who ought to be men in their relationship (marriage, family, whatever).

“Women with chests” really ought to comjure up some other image than that of either twin-turreted spouts of vitriol or strapped-in-the-harness workhorses. But with men mostly abdicating manhood, women will fill in the void of both manly vice and manly virtue while those who ought to be men slink off into a corner and form their various boys’ clubs.

A Test

Re: the TSA and other governmental abominations

“Find out just what people will submit to, and you have found out the exact amount of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them; and these will continue until they are resisted with either words or blows, or with both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress.” — Frederick Douglass, August 4, 1857

“Gwnewch y pethau bychain”

Or, “Do the little things.”

This phrase, taken from what has been traditionally acredited to St David’s last sermon, characterize the life and faith of

“…St. Lily, surnamed Gwas-Dewy, that is, St. David’s man, [was David’s] beloved disciple and companion in his retirement.” (*)

St Lily apparently took to heart the lessons he heard and learned from his mentor, since he is honored (still, primarily in Wales) for his faithfulness to David’s teaching to

“Be joyful, and keep your faith and your creed. Do the little things that you have seen me do and heard about… ” (**)

Augustine also echoed Christ when he said, “To be faithful in little things is a big thing.”

“He who is faithful in very little things is faithful also in much.” – Luke 16:10

It’s redundant

slapping a silly person silly is just… silly

Found a comment that sums up my inner response to fake optimism:

…whenever I hear someone say “Everything is perfect” — while their facial expression indicates otherwise — my inner Groucho usually replies, “Well, I’m glad to hear that, because I just stepped in some dog perfection and I’m tracking it all over your rug!”

Yet another Celtic saint largely unhonored

As much effect in England as Patrick in Ireland, perhaps more…

I speak, of course, of St Nun, the mother of St David, who is honored the day after St David’s Day, that is, today.

Happy St Nun’s Day!

(No snarky comments. I’ll have…. um, none of that.)

Look out for tomorrow: yet another Christian pioneer with strong ties to David of Wales.

(Who needs St Patrick with all the Welsh pioneers honored in March?)

Beach Boys Redux

“Get around round round I get around… “

Well, “got around” might be more accurate. I don’t like to travel any more.

Instructions were: “Bold the states you’ve been to, underline the states you’ve lived in and italicize the state you’re in now… ” As you can see, at one time I have lived in, been to or passed through all the contiguous states in the U.S. Only three foreign countries, though (not on the list, of course), and those all in North America.

Alabama / Alaska / Arizona / Arkansas / California / Colorado / Connecticut / Delaware / Florida / Georgia / Hawaii / Idaho / Illinois / Indiana / Iowa / Kansas / Kentucky / Louisiana / Maine / Maryland / Massachusetts / Michigan / Minnesota / Mississippi / Missouri / Montana / Nebraska / Nevada / New Hampshire / New Jersey / New Mexico / New York / North Carolina / North Dakota / Ohio / Oklahoma / Oregon / Pennsylvania / Rhode Island / South Carolina / South Dakota / Tennessee / Texas / Utah / Vermont / Virginia / Washington / West Virginia / Wisconsin / Wyoming / Washington D.C /

Go HERE to have a form generate the HTML for you.

Thx to Boudicca’s Voice for the link to the site.

Take THAT, Enviro-Nazi LLMs

Sun to Blame for Arctic Ozone Loss

Numbskulls in the LLMB have been shrilly screeching about mankind’s assault on upper-level ozone. (Calmly) Get vack in their face with a firm, “It’s not my fault. Blame the Sun.”

“A dramatic thinning of Earth’s protective ozone layer above the Arctic last year was the result of intense upper-level winds and an extra dose of space weather, scientists said Tuesday.”

St David’s Day


DEWI SANT, written March 1, 1994 in honor of St David.
CLICK on the graphic for a full-sized view. Posted by Hello

The text, tune and harmonies are as extemporaneously written. I’ve not done any editing for content or to redact either the text for poetic improvement or the music or text for better prosody. It stands as I first “heard” it. St David’s evangelistic efforts, his combat of the Pelagian heresy, etc., are all reflected in the text, and placed in the context that he demonstrated that he considered to be of first importance: Christ and His work. This great 6th century missionary to Wales is a worthy model for us all, IMO, and he and all those who went before and followed after him in similar endeavors deserve our greatest respect.

(Crossposted at http://whistlinginthelight.blogspot.com/)